Tulunids
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The Tulunids were the first independent dynasty in Islamic Egypt (868–905). In the 9th century, internal conflict amongst the Abbasids meant that control of the outlying areas of the empire was increasingly tenuous, and in 868, the Turkish officer Ahmad ibn Tulun (868-884) was able to rule as an independent governor of Egypt. He subsequently achieved nominal autonomy from the central Abbasids. During his reign and those of his successors, the Tulunid domains were expanded to include Palestine and Syria, as well as small holdings in Asia Minor. Ahmad was succeeded by his son Khumarawayh, whose military and diplomatic achievements made him a major player in the Middle Eastern political stage. The Abbasids affirmed their recognition of the Tulunids as legitimate rulers, and the dynasty's status as vassals to the caliphate. The later Tulunid emirs were all ineffectual rulers, and the Turkish and black slave-soldiers instead ran the affairs of the state. In 905, the Tulunids were unable to stop the Abbasid troops who restored direct caliphal rule in Syria and Egypt.[1][2]
The Tulunid period was marked by economic and administrative reforms alongside cultural ones. Ahmad ibn Tulun changed the taxation system and aligned himself with the merchant community. He also established the Tulunid army. The capital was moved from Fustat to al-Qatta'i, where the celebrated mosque of ibn Tulun was constructed.
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[edit] Historic context
The rise and fall of the Tulunids occurs against a backdrop of increasing regionalism in the Muslim world. The Abbasid caliphate was struggling with regional disturbances and losing their aura of universal legitimacy. There had previously been Coptic and Alid-led movements in Egypt, without more than temporary and local success. There was also a struggle for power between the Turkish military command and the administration of Iraq. Furthermore, there was a widening imperial financial crisis. All of these themes would recur during the Tulunid rule.[2]
The internal politics of the Abbasid caliphate itself seems to have been unstable. In 870, Abū Aḥmad (b. al-Mutawakkil) al-Muwaffaḳ (d. 891) was summoned from exile in Mecca to re-establish Abbasid authority over southern Iraq. Quickly, however, he became the de facto ruler of the caliphate. As a result of these developments, Ahmad Ibn Tulun could establish and expand his authority. Thus the Tulunids wielded regional power, largely unhindered by imperial will; as such, the Tulunids can be compared with other 9th-century dynasties of the Muslim world, including the Aghlabids and the Tahirids.[2]
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Mashriq Dynasties
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Maghrib Dynasties
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[edit] History
[edit] Ahmad ibn Tulun
Ahmad Ibn Ṭūlūn was a member of the mostly Central Asian Turkish guard formed initially in Baghdad, then later settled in Samarra, upon its establishment as the seat of the caliphate by al-Mu'tasim. In 254/868, Ibn Tulun was sent to Egypt as resident governor by Bāyakbāk (d. 256/870), the representative of the Abbasid caliph al-Muʿtazz.[2] Ibn Tulun promptly established a financial and military presence in the province of Egypt by establishing an independent Egyptian army and taking over the management of the Egyptian and Syrian treasuries. In 877, troops of the caliphate were sent against him, due to his insufficient payment of tribute. Ahmad ibn Tulun, however, maintained his power, and took Syria the following year.[1]
His successful ten-years' reign allowed him to leave behind a well-trained military, a stable economy and an experienced bureaucracy to oversee the state affairs. He appointed his son, Ḵh̲umāramayh, as the heir.[2]
With full autonomy, once the tax income no longer had to go to the Caliph in Baghdad, it was possible to develop irrigation works and build a navy, which greatly stimulated the local economy and trade. In 878, Palestine and Syria were occupied, the better to defend Egypt against Abbasid attack.
[edit] Khumarawayh
Following his father’s death, Ḵh̲umārawayh took control as the designated heir. The first challenge he faced was the invasion of Syria by armies sent by al-Muwaffaḳas, the de facto ruler during the reign of caliph al-Muʿtamid. Ḵh̲umārawayh also had to deal with the defection of Ahmad b. Muhammad al-Wāsiṭī to the invaders' camps, a long-time and key ally of his father's.[2]
The young Tulunid achieved political and military gains, enabling him to extend his authority from Egypt into northern Iraq, and later as far north as Tarsus by 890. Being now a prominent player in the Near Eastern political stage, he negotiated two treaties with the Abbasids. In the first treaty in 886, al-Muwaffakin recognized Tulunid authority over Egypt and the regions of Syria for a thirty-year period. The second treaty, reached with al-Muʿtadid in 892, confirmed the terms of the earlier accord. Both treaties also sought to confirm the status of the Tulunid governor as a vassal of the caliphal family seated in Baghdad.[2]
Despite his gains, Ḵh̲umārawayh's reign also set the stage for the demise of the dynasty. Financial exhaustion, political infighting and strides by the ʿAbbāsids would all contribute the ruin of the Tulunids.[2] Ḵh̲umārawayh was also totally reliant on his Turkish and sub-Saharan soldiers. Under the administration of Khumarawayh, the Syro-Egyptian state's finances and military were destabilized.[1]
[edit] Demise
The later emirs of the dynasty were all ineffectual rulers, relying on their Turkish and black soldiers to run the affairs of the state.[1]
Khumarawayh's son Abu l-Ashir (also known as J̲ays̲h)̲ was deposed by the Ṭūlūnid military command in 896 AD, shortly after coming to power. He was succeeded by his brother, Harun. Though the brother would rule for eight years, he was unable to revitalize the dynasty. He was assassinated in 905. Harun's successor, S̲h̲aybān b . Aḥmad b. Ṭūlūn was unable to resist an Abbasid invasion under the command of Muḥammad b. Sulaymān, with naval support from frontier forces based in Tarsus. This brought an end to his reign and that of the Ṭūlūnids.[1]
[edit] Culture
- See also: al-Qatta'i and Mosque of Ibn Tulun
Ahmad ibn Tulun founded his own capital, al-Qatta'i, north of the previous capital Fustat, where he seated his government. One of the dominant features of this city, and indeed the feature that survives today, was the Mosque of Ibn Tulun. The mosque is built in a Samarran style that was common in the period during which the caliphate had shifted capitals from Baghdad to Samarra. This style of architecture wasn't just confined to religious buildings, but secular ones also. Surviving houses of the Tulunid period have Samarran-style stucco panels.[3]
Ḵh̲umārawayh's exceeded his father in spending. He had built luxuriant palaces and gardens for himself and those he favored. To the Tulunid Egyptians, his marvelous blue-eyed palace lion exemplified his prodigality. His stables were so extensive that, according to popular lore, Ḵh̲umārawayh never rode a horse more than once. Though he squandered the dynastic wealth, he also encouraged a rich cultural life with patronage of scholarship and poetry. His protégé and the teacher of his sons was the famed grammarian Muḥammad b. ʿAbd Allāh b. Muḥammad Muslim (d. 944). An encomium was written by Ḳāsim b . Yaḥyā al-Maryamī (d. 317/929)to celebrate Ḵh̲umārawayh's triumphs on the battlefield.[4]
Through the mediation of his closest adviser, al-Ḥusayn Ibn al-Ḏj̲aṣṣāṣ al-Ḏj̲awharī, Ḵh̲umārawayh arranged for one of the great political marriages of medieval Islamic history. He proposed his daughter's marriage to a member of the caliphal family in Baghdad. The marriage between the Tulunid princess Ḳaṭr al-Nadā with the Abbasid caliph al-Mu'tadid took place in 892. The exorbitant marriage included an awesome dowry estimated at between 400,000 to one million dinars. Some speculate that the splendours of the wedding were a calculated attempt by the Abbasids to ruin the Tulunids. The tale of the splendid nuptials of Ḳaṭr al-Nadā lived on in the memory of the Egyptian people well into the Ottoman period, and were recorded in the chronicles and the folk-literature.[4] The marriage's importance arises from its exceptional nature: the phenomenon of marriage between royal families is rare in Islamic history.[5] The concept of dowry given by the bride's family has also been absent in Islamic marriages, where mahr, or bride price has been the custom.[6]
[edit] Military
During his reign, Ibn Tulun created an autonomous army and navy. The need for such an establishment of the Tulunid army became apparent after the revolt of ʿĪsā b. al-S̲h̲ayk̲h, governor of Palestine, in 870. In response, Ibn Tulun organized an army composed of Sudanese and Greek slave-soldiers. Other reports indicate the soldiers may have been Persians and Sudanese.[7] Ḵh̲umārawayh continued his father's policy of having a multi-ethnic army. His military prowess, in fact, was strengthened by his multi-ethnic regiments of black Sudanese soldiers, Greek mercenaries and fresh Turkish troops from Turkestan.[4]
Ibn Tulun founded an élite guard to surround the Tulunid family. These formed the core of the Tulunid army, around which other other larger regiments were built. These troops are said to have been from the region of G̲h̲ūr in Afghanistan, during Ibn Tulun's reign, and from local Arabs during the reign of Ḵh̲umārawayh. In a ceremony held in 871, Ibn Tulun had his forces swear personal allegiance to him. Nevertheless, there were defections from the Tulunid army, most notably of the high-ranking commander Luʾluʾ in 883 to the Abbasids. Throughout its life the army faced such persistent problems of securing allegiance.[7]
Ḵh̲umārawayh also established an elite corps called al-muk̲h̲tāra. The corps was composed of unruly bedouins of the eastern Nile delta. By bestowing privileges upon the tribesmen, and converting them into an efficient and loyal bodyguard he brought peace to the region between Egypt and Syria. He also re-asserted his control over this strategic region. The regiment also included one thousand Sudanese blacks.[4]
A list of military engagements in which the Tulunid army constituted a significant party is as follows:
- In 877, the Tulunid troops, after displaying their strength, forced the Abbasid army under Mūsā b. Bug̲h̲ā to abandon his plan to depose Ahmad ibn Tulun.[8]
- In 878, the Tulunids, under the pretext of a [[jihad] to defend the frontiers of Asia Minor against the Byzantines, occupied Syria. This campaign was ended prematurely, as Ibn Tulun had to return to Egypt.
- In 885, the Tulunid army lead by Khumarawayh met the invading Abbasids at the Battle of the Mills (al-Ṭawāḥīn) in southern Palestine. The Abbasids led by Aḥmad b. al-Muwaffaḳ had invaded Syria, and the governor of Damascus had defected to the enemy. After both Ahmad and Khumarawayh fled the battlefield, the Ṭūlūnid general Saʿd al-Aysar secured victory.[4]
- From 885 - 886, the Tulunid forces, lead by Khumarawayh, defeated Ibn Kundād̲j, though the latter had superior numbers. A domino effect followed, as the Jazira, Cilicia and regions as far east as Haran submitted to the Tulunid army. Peace treaties with the Tulunids put an end to the military campaigns.[4]
- From 896 to 905, after the emirate's demise the Tulunids were unable to stop the Abbasids from taking their capital al-Qatta'i.[4]
[edit] Economy
During the reign of Ahmad ibn Tulun, the Egyptian economy remained prosperous. There were propitious levels of agricultural production, stimulated by consistent high flooding of the Nile. Other industries (particularly the textile one) also thrived. In his administration, ibn Tulun asserted more autonomy, even refusing to pay taxes to the central Abbasid government in Baghdad. He also reformed the administration, aligning himself with the merchant community, and changing the taxation system. Under the Tulunids, there were also repairs in the agricultural infrastructure. The key sector of production, investment, and participation in their Mediterranean-wide commerce, was textiles, linen in particular (Frantz, 281-5).[7]
[edit] Financial autonomy
Ahmad ibn Tulun started the dynasty by asserting more financial autonomy. During the period of 870-872, ibn Tulun asserted more control over Egypt's financial administration. In 871, ibn Tulun took control of the kharaj taxes as well as the t̲h̲ug̲h̲ūr from Syria. He also achieved victory over ibn al-Mudabbir, the head of the finance office and member of the Abbasid bureaucratic élite.[7]
The de facto ruler of the Abbasid caliphate, al-Muwaffak, took issue with ibn Tulun's financial activities. He wanted to secure Egyptian revenue for his campaign against the Zanj rebellion (and perhaps limit the autonomy of the Tulunids). This pressing need for funds drew the attention of Baghdad to the considerably more wealthy Egypt.[7] The situation came to a head in 877, when al-Muwaffak, upon not receiving the demanded funds, sent an army to depose Ahmad ibn Tulun.[8] Nevertheless, on at least two occasions, ibn Tulun remitted considerable sums of revenue, along with gifts, to the central Abbasid administration.[7]
Under Ahmad's son, Khumarawayh, the Abbasids formally entered into a treaty with the Tulunids, thereby ending hostilities and resuming the payment of tribute. Financial provisions were made in the first treaty in 886 with al-Muwaffak. A second treaty with al-Muʿtaḍid, the son of al-Muwaffak, in 892, re-affirmed the political terms of the first. Financially, the Tulunids were to pay 300,000 dīnārs (though this figure may be inaccurate) annually.[4]
[edit] Tulunid administration
The Tūlūnid administration over Egypt bore several notable features. The style of rule was highly centralized and pitiless in its execution. The administration was also backed by Egypt’s commercial, religious and social élite. Ahmad ibn Tulun replaced Iraqi officials with an Egyptian bureaucracy. Overall, the administration relied on relied on the powerful merchant community for both financial and diplomatic support. One example of this is, Maʿmar al-Ḏj̲awharī, a leading member of the merchant community in Egypt, served as ibn Ṭūlūn’s financier.[7]
The Tulunid administration also helped the economy prosper, by maintaining political stability, which in Egypt is a sine qua non. Isolated revolts among the Copts and some Arab nomads in upper Egypt, which never threatened the dynasty's power, were actually a response to the more efficient Tulunid fiscal practices. The economy was strengthened by reforms introduced both immediately before the Tulunids and during their reign. There were changes in the system of assessing and collecting taxes assessment and collection system. There was also an expansion in the use of tax-contracts, which were the source of an emergent land-holding élite in this period.[7] Ahmad ibn Tulun's agrarian and administrative reforms resulted in encouraging peasants to work their lands with zeal, despite the heavy taxes. He also terminated the exactions of the administration officers for their personal profit.[8]
One final feature of the administration under ibn Ṭūlūn was the discontinued practice of draining off the majority of his revenue to the metropolis. Instead, he initiated building programs to benefit other parts of Egypt. He also used those funds to stimulate commerce and industry.[8]
[edit] Large expenditures
Ḵh̲umārawayh inherited a stable economy and a wealthy polity from his father. The treasury was worth ten million dīnārs at the eve of the young Tulunid's rise. When Ḵh̲umārawayh was killed in 896, the treasury was empty, and the dinar had sunk to one-third its value. Part of this financial disaster is attributed to his addiction to luxury, while squandering wealth to win loyalty was also one cause.[4]
Ḵh̲umārawayh’s, unlike his father, spent significant sums of money. For example, he gifted to his daughter, Ḳaṭr al-Nadā, an extraordinary dowry of 400,000 - 1,000,000 dīnārs, wither her wedding in 892 with the Abbasid al-Muʿtaḍid. This move is speculated by scholars to have been an attempt to drain the Tulunid treasury.[7]
[edit] See also
[edit] Neighboring states
[edit] Tulunid emirs
- Ahmad ibn Tulun (868-884)
- Khumarawaih (884-896)
- Abu l-Ashir (896)
- Harun (896-904)
- Shaiban (904-905)
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c d e "Tulunid Dynasty." Encyclopædia Britannica
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Ṭūlūnids," Encyclopaedia of Islam
- ^ Behrens-Abouseif (1989)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Ḵh̲umārawayh b. Aḥmad b. Ṭūlūn ," Encyclopaedia of Islam
- ^ Rizk, Yunan Labib.Royal mix. Al-Ahram Weekly. 2-8 March 2006, Issue No. 784.
- ^ Rapoport (2000), p. 27-8
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Ṭūlūnids," Encyclopaedia of Islam
- ^ a b c d "Aḥmad b. Ṭūlūn" Encyclopaedia of Islam
[edit] References
- Behrens-Abouseif, Doris (1989). "Early Islamic Architecture in Cairo". In Islamic Architecture in Cairo: An Introduction. Leiden; New York: E.J. Brill.
- Gordon, M.S. "Ṭūlūnids ." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P. Bearman , Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth , E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2008. Brill Online. 04 May 2008
- Haarmann, U. "Ḵh̲umārawayh b. Aḥmad b. Ṭūlūn ." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P. Bearman , Th. Bianquis , C.E. Bosworth , E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2008. Brill Online. 04 May 2008
- Hassan, Zaky M. "Aḥmad b. Ṭūlūn ." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P. Bearman , Th. Bianquis , C.E. Bosworth , E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2008. Brill Online. 04 May 2008
- "Tulunid dynasty", The New Encyclopedia Britannica (Rev Ed edition). (2005). Encyclopedia Britannica, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1593392369
- Rapoport, Yossef. "Matrimonial Gifts in Early Islamic Egypt," Islamic Law and Society, 7 (1): 1-36, 2000.